hidden
Hình bìa

Great Gray Poet or Great Gray Fool? Queries of Whitman's Legacy by Chris Adrian, Sherman Alexie, Andrea Dworkin, and Michael Cunningham

This article analyzes counterintuitive uses of Walt Whitman by four contemporary US writers. Chris Adrian's Gob's Grief, Sherman Alexie's "Defending Walt Whitman," Andrea Dworkin's Mercy, and Michael Cunningham's Specimen Days break from common practice by displaying ambivalence or hostility toward Whitman, questioning his symbolic legacy rather than claiming heritage with him. I argue that their use of Whitman shows that the writers I discuss recognize that the form of twentieth and twenty-first century society presents philosophical and ethical problems with the re-use of longstanding liberal shibboleths, often associated with figures like Whitman. I compare Whitman's treatment by these authors to more conventional narrative uses, in which authors link their characters and narratives to a romantic American identity that Whitman symbolizes. The revisionist Whitman we see in Adrian, Alexie, Dworkin, and Cunningham interrogate this continual turning to Whitman, demonstrating important tensions within the contemporary US's self-conception.

Loại tài liệu:
Article - Bài báo
Tác giả:
Gonzalez, Jeffrey
Đề mục:
American literature
Nhà xuất bản:
Johns Hopkins University Press and West Chester University 2019
Ngày xuất bản:
2019
Số trang/ tờ:
pdf
Nguồn gốc:
College Literature, volume 46, number 4, 2019, pages 829-859
Liên kết:
ISSN 0093-3139
Lượt xem: 0
Loại file Tập tin đính kèm Dung lượng Chi tiết
201904CL829-859.pdf 575444 Kb XemTải